The National Lampoon Radio Hour ran from November
17, 1973 to December 28, 1974, and was broadcast weekly on hundreds of
stations throughout the U.S. It was one of the best radio comedy shows
ever produced, and introduced many talented and now well-known perfomers
to a national audience for the first time. Among the performers that appeared
regularly or irregularly were Chevy Chase, John Belushi, Christopher
Guest, Michael O'Donoghue, Bill Murray, Brian Doyle-Murray, Gilda Radner,
Harry Shearer, Harold Ramis, Joe Flaherty, Richard Belzer, Tony Scheuren,
Windy Craig, Flo & Eddie, George Coe, Gary Goodrow, Norman Rose,
and Alice Playten, just to name a few.

The show was the brainchild of NatLamp editor
Michael O'Donoghue. After the success
of the comedy album Radio
Dinner, he was able to convince publisher Matty Simmons
to let him do a weekly radio show. A recording studio was built several
floors above the magazine's editorial offices on Madison Avenue in New
York. Teaming up once again with producer Bob Tischler, the talented
engineer who had worked with O'Donoghue and Tony Hendra on Radio
Dinner, the show successfully transfered the humor of the magazine to
a radio format. Like the magazine, the show had a highly professional,
understated style which hightened the effect of its often shocking sense
of humor.

The show used up an incredible amount of material
each week and strained the resources of the magazine. As a result, it
was cut to a half hour after 13 shows. It also had a hard time retaining
national sponsors, due partly to the content of the show, and consequently
did not do very well financially. O'Donoghue, drained of energy and patience,
left the show--and the magazine--for good on Easter Sunday in 1974. John
Belushi took over as creative director of the show for the remainder
of its run.

After the show ended, many of the performers and
writers went on to both Saturday Night Live (where O'Donoghue was
the head writer in its first two seasons) and Second City Television.
Among the original cast and writers on SNL were Radio Hour alums Chevy
Chase, John Belushi, Bill Murray, Gilda Radner, and Anne Beatts (writer),
and later on Bob Tischler (producer for four seasons), Brian McConnachie
(writer), Bruce McCall (writer), Brian Doyle-Murray, Harry Shearer, and
Christopher Guest. It would not be far-fetched to say that early SNL was,
for all intents and purposes, the National Lampoon TV Hour, with no credit
given to the magazine for blazing the trail. As for SCTV, its original
cast and writers included Harold Ramis and Joe Flaherty. (It should be
noted here that many of the NLRH cast were hired from Second City Comedy
Clubs in both Chicago and Toronto--so the connection goes very deep.)
Tischler also went on to produce the Blues Brothers albums.

Much of the material from the show was released
on LPs by National Lampoon. Records released by NatLamp
consisting either entirely or in part of NLRH material were The Missing
Whitehouse Tapes (1974), Gold
Turkey/Radio Hour Greatest Hits (1975), That's Not Funny, That's Sick!
(1977), Greatest Hits of the National Lampoon (1978), and National
Lampoon's White Album (1979). Of these, Gold Turkey is the only one
to my knowledge that was released on CD (still available, too). Some of
the shows were rebroadcast in the '80s by the King Biscuit Flower Hour
in a somewhat different format (i.e., with more commercials and with some
shows combined and abridged). (Two of these broadcasts are listed here.)
Also released by NatLamp in the early '90s were three volumes on
cassette called National Lampoon Radio Hour: The Lost Tapes, though
they are very difficult to find. Most recently, Rhino (bless their hearts)
released The Best of The National Lampoon Radio Hour (1996). This
3 CD/cassette boxed set is the largest single collection of material from
the show. It has great liner notes, but unfortunately has more than a
little previously released material, not to mention a photo of someone
misidentified as Brian McConnachie and a few factual errors.

Sharp-eyed readers will notice that the broadcast
dates do not consistently fall on a particular day of the week. This is
because local stations set the broadcast time. The date listed reflects
the broadcast date of the particular recording that the listing came from.

In the listings, commercial breaks are noted. These
were either national or local sponsors. Only commercials produced by National
Lampoon are identified. These were often as entertaining as the rest
of the show, and had the same writers, cast and high production standards.
It's interesting to note that these "house" ads became more
frequent in the later shows due to the failure of the show to retain national
advertisers and local stations' inability to sell the left over air time.
Presumably, "house" ads were produced throughout the run of
the show, but many of the earlier ones probably never made it to the air
waves as the air time had been sold.

This extensive addition to Mark's Very Large National
Lampoon Site would not have been possible without the efforts of Dave
Meredith. Dave has been collecting recordings of the shows for years,
and compiled almost all of the information in this section. Thanks, Dave!

Show listings on this page include only highlights
for reference.
For complete individual show listings, follow the links.
Show titles are included when they exist. Not all shows were titled.